It describes the type of novel the speaker likes.
Child bearer is another term for a mother. Like "birth giver" "mother" ect.
Yes, you can use it in a sentence.
"She is adopted but the kind woman in the red dress is the child bearer."
"Susan is a child bearer of the sweet little girl."
I have no idea if these are even good examples, but it is a strange phrase anyways, I hope I helped.
<span>Not able to bring under; overwhelming is the closest one because insufferable means too extreme to bear, intolerable.
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The answer to your question would be that the sentence that uses two prepositional phrases is the following one: The helicopter landed among the cars in the parking lot. The two prepositional phrases in the sentence are "among the cars" and "in the parking lot".
A prepositional phrase is a group of words made up of a preposition and its object. The object may be a noun, a pronoun, a gerund or a clause. What is more, a prepositional phrase functions as an adjective or adverb.